wind science 101: i. overview of wind patterns eugene s. takle professor department of agronomy...
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Wind Science 101:I. Overview of Wind Patterns
Eugene S. TakleProfessor
Department of AgronomyDepartment of Geological and Atmospheric Science
Director, Climate Science ProgramIowa State University
Ames, IA 50011
WESEP REU Short CourseIowa State University
Spring 2011
Outline Global scale 3-D global circulation patterns and wind energy Surface and upper-air tropical and mid-latitude weather systems,
including prevailing westerlies Mesoscale Great Plains Low-Level Jet and nocturnal LLJs Sea-breeze Monsoon circulation Off-shore resources US wind resource maps Forecasting wind resources Atmospheric boundary layer Structure and diurnal/seasonal evolution Impact of static and dynamic stability on horizontal wind speeds
and vertical profiles Turbulent flows and interactive wakes
http://eesc.columbia.edu/courses/ees/climate/lectures/gen_circ/index.html
Not to scale!
Mean radius of the earth:
6371 kmHeight of the troposphere:
0-7 km at poles20 km at Equator
90% of atmosphere is in the lowest 15 miles (24 km)99% in lowest 30 miles (48 km)
Non-rotating Earth heated at its Equator
Global Precipitation Patterns
To bring air from outside an airplane flying at 35,000 ft into the cabin, the compression to sea-level pressure would raise the air temperature to 430oC or 806oF
NOAA NCEP-NCAR CDAS-1 MONTHLY 300 mb [ u , v ] climatology
January
Wind speed at 12 km
NOAA NCEP-NCAR CDAS-1 MONTHLY 300 mb [ u , v ] climatology
July
http://eesc.columbia.edu/courses/ees/climate/lectures/gen_circ/300mbWinds.html
Wind speed at 12 km
NOAA NCEP-NCAR CDAS-1 MONTHLY Diagnostic above_ground [ u , v ] climatology (m/s)
January
http://eesc.columbia.edu/courses/ees/climate/lectures/gen_circ/300mbWinds.html
Wind speed near surface
NOAA NCEP-NCAR CDAS-1 MONTHLY Diagnostic above_ground [ u , v ] climatology (m/s)
July
http://eesc.columbia.edu/courses/ees/climate/lectures/gen_circ/300mbWinds.html
Wind speed near surface
NOAA NCEP-NCAR CDAS-1 DAILY300 mb height (m) and winds (m/s)1 Apr 1997
http://eesc.columbia.edu/courses/ees/climate/lectures/gen_circ/300mbWinds.html
Continental and Regional influences Continental scale circulation, jet streams
Great Plains Low-Level Jet
Coastal Jets
Sea breezes
Mountain-valley flows
Mountain compression of stream lines
Monsoons
Off-shore wind
Mechanism of the Nocturnal Low-Level Jet:
Great Plains Low-Level Jet (GPLLJ)Nocturnal Low-Level Jet (LLJ)
Coastal Jet (CJ)
Mechanism of the Nocturnal Low-Level Jet:
Great Plains Low-Level Jet (GPLLJ)Nocturnal Low-Level Jet (LLJ)
Coastal Jet (CJ)
HLPressure Gradient
HLPressure Gradient
Fc
Fp
Fc = -2ΩxV
Coriolis Force
HLPressure Gradient
Fc
Fp
HLFp Fc
Vg
Geostrophic Balance
HLFp
Fc
V
FfFrictional Force
Ff = -CdvV
HLFp
Fc
V
At night, friction is eliminated, flow is accelerated, V increases
HLFp
Fc
V
Coriolis force increase, wind vector rotates and speed continues to increase
HLFp
Fc
V
Vg
Wind vector rotates and speed continues to increase and exceeds geostrophic wind
Rocky Mountains
Missouri River
High Temp Low TempLow Press High Press
Simulation of the Great Plains Low-Level Jet. Adam Deppe thesis, Iowa State University, 2010
Mechanism of the Nocturnal Low-Level Jet:
Great Plains Low-Level Jet (GPLLJ)Nocturnal Low-Level Jet (LLJ)
Coastal Jet (CJ)
High Temp Low Temp
Low Press High Press
Hei
ght a
bove
gro
und
Horizontal wind speed
Nocturnal Jet Maximum (~200 m above ground)
Mechanism of the Nocturnal Low-Level Jet:
Great Plains Low-Level Jet (GPLLJ)Nocturnal Low-Level Jet (LLJ)
Coastal Jet (CJ)
High Temp Low Temp
Low Press High Press
Coastal Mountains
High Temp Low Temp
Low Press High Press
HLFp
Fc
V
FfFrictional Force
Ff = -CdvV
Mountains producean additional pressure force
Take Home MessagesWinds are created by horizontal temperature
difference (which create density differences and hence pressure difference)
Rotation of the Earth creates bands of high winds (prevailing westerlies) at mid-latitudes
Interactions with the day-night heating and cooling of
the earth’s surface create changes in the vertical structure of the horizontal wind
Orographic feature (coastal regions, mountains, etc) create local circulations that enhance or decrease wind speeds
Wind Science 101:Part II
Eugene S. TakleProfessor
Department of AgronomyDepartment of Geological and Atmospheric Science
Director, Climate Science ProgramIowa State University
Ames, IA 50011
Honors Wind SeminarIowa State University
Spring 2011
Continental and Regional influences Continental scale circulation, jet streams
Great Plains Low-Level Jet
Coastal Jets
Sea breezes
Mountain-valley flows
Mountain compression of stream lines
Monsoons
Off-shore wind
H
100 km
Musial, W., and B. Ram, 2010: Large-scale Offshore Wind Power in the United States. Assessment of Opportunities and Barriers. NREL/TP-500-40745. 240 pp. [Available online at http://www.osti.gov/bridge]
Musial, W., and B. Ram, 2010: Large-scale Offshore Wind Power in the United States. Assessment of Opportunities and Barriers. NREL/TP-500-40745. 240 pp. [Available online at http://www.osti.gov/bridge]
Musial, W., and B. Ram, 2010: Large-scale Offshore Wind Power in the United States. Assessment of Opportunities and Barriers. NREL/TP-500-40745. 240 pp. [Available online at http://www.osti.gov/bridge]
Musial, W., and B. Ram, 2010: Large-scale Offshore Wind Power in the United States. Assessment of Opportunities and Barriers. NREL/TP-500-40745. 240 pp. [Available online at http://www.osti.gov/bridge]
Musial, W., and B. Ram, 2010: Large-scale Offshore Wind Power in the United States. Assessment of Opportunities and Barriers. NREL/TP-500-40745. 240 pp. [Available online at http://www.osti.gov/bridge]
Takle, E. S., 1975: Wind and Wind Energy in Iowa. Report to the Iowa Energy Council. 99 pp.
Hei
ght (
z)
Windspeed
Power Law
Logarithmic Dependence
U* = friction velocityk = von Karman’s constant (0.40)zo= roughness length
Num
ber o
f Occ
urre
nces
Winspeed (m/s)
2 10864 12 14 16 18 20 22
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